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Does distance still matter? the information revolution in small business lending?

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TLDR
In this paper, the authors show that the distance between small firms and their lenders in the United States is increasing, and they conjecture that greater, and more timely, availability of borrower credit records, as well as the greater ease of processing these may explain the increased lending at a distance.
Abstract
The distance between small firms and their lenders in the United States is increasing. Not only are firms choosing more distant lenders, they are also communicating with them in more impersonal ways. After documenting these systematic changes, we demonstrate that they do not stem from small firms locating differently, from simple consolidation in the banking industry, or from biases in the sample. Instead, they seem correlated with improvements in bank productivity. We conjecture that greater, and more timely, availability of borrower credit records, as well as the greater ease of processing these may explain the increased lending at a distance. Consistent with such an explanation, distant firms no longer have to be observably the highest quality credits, suggesting that a wider cross-section of firms can now obtain funding from a particular lender. These findings, we believe, are direct evidence that there has been substantial development of the financial sector in the United States, even in areas such as small business lending that have not been directly influenced by the growth in public markets. From a policy perspective, that small firms now obtain wider access to financing suggests the consolidation of banking services may not raise as strong anti-trust concerns as in the past.

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Citations
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Information Asymmetry and Financing Arrangements: Evidence from Syndicated Loans

Amir Sufi
- 01 Apr 2007 - 
TL;DR: The authors empirically explore the syndicated loan market, with an emphasis on how information asymmetry between lenders and borrowers influences syndicate structure and on which lenders become syndicate members, finding that the lead bank retains a larger share of the loan and forms a more concentrated syndicate when the borrower requires more intense monitoring and due diligence.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Financial Intermediation and Delegated Monitoring

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors developed a theory of financial intermediation based on minimizing the cost of monitoring information which is useful for resolving incentive problems between borrowers and lenders, and presented a characterization of the costs of providing incentives for delegated monitoring by a financial intermediary.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Benefits of Lending Relationships: Evidence from Small Business Data

TL;DR: In this article, the authors empirically examined how ties between a firm and its creditors affect the availability and cost of funds to the firm and found that the primary benefit of building close ties with an institutional creditor is that the availability of financing increases.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Effect of Credit Market Competition on Lending Relationships

TL;DR: The authors showed that the extent of competition in credit markets is important in determining the value of lending relationships and that creditors are more likely to finance credit constrained firms when credit markets are concentrated because it is easier for these creditors to internalize the benefits of assisting the firms.
Posted Content

Relationship Lending and Lines of Credit in Small Firm Finance

TL;DR: The authors examined the role of relationship lending in small firm finance and found that borrowers with longer banking relationships pay lower interest rates and are less likely to pledge collateral, consistent with theoretical arguments that relationship lending generates valuable information about borrower quality.
Journal ArticleDOI

Home Bias at Home: Local Equity Preference in Domestic Portfolios

TL;DR: The authors showed that the strong bias in favor of domestic securities is a well-documented characteristic of international investment portfolios, yet the preference for investing close to home also applies to portfolios of domestic stocks.
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